PROLOGUE
Everyone in the McLaughlin household thought Kevin was going to be at his regular Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) meeting that Thursday night, but for some reason he decided not to go. Instead, over a dinner of leftovers at their house in the affluent enclave of Newport Beach, California, Kevin and his father discussed how he was doing in the brain injury program at Orange Coast College.
Bill McLaughlin, a fifty-five-year-old entrepreneurial multimillionaire, had just flown his Piper Malibu back from Las Vegas, where he routinely spent a couple of days a week. Claiming residence at one of his two houses there, rather than in Newport Beach, saved him $500,000 in taxes each year.
Bill's twenty-nine-year-old fiancée, Nanette Johnston, was out that night. Knowing that Bill and Kevin would get home before she did, she'd left them a Post-it note on a lamp in the den, saying that she was at her son's championship soccer game:
Bill and Kev, we won our game, so we are playing again tonight. See you later, Nanette.
After dinner, Kevin went upstairs to his room to listen to his Walkmanâprobably some Bad Religion or Megadeth, his two favorite bandsâwhile Bill settled down with a nightcap and some paperwork in his usual perch at the dining-room table.
Just after 9:00
P.M.
, Kevin was startled by a series of gunshots downstairs.
Pop pop, pause . . . Pop pop, pause . . . Pop pop, pause.
Hearing Goldie barking like crazy, Kevin jumped off his bed and hobbled out of his room as quickly as his slow, awkward gait would allow. Their golden retriever wasn't an aggressive or protective guard dog. She was more of a licker that Nanette had fallen in love with at the pound, so all that barking was unusual.
Three years earlier, Kevin had suffered a severe brain trauma, which had put him into a coma for four months during which he was dependent on a ventilator. After he came out of it, he had difficulty walking, so it took him almost a full minute to travel from the second-floor balcony, down two flights of stairs, and into the kitchen to see what was going on.
To his horror, he found his father lying on his side in his blue robe and slippers, his right arm tucked under his stomach, surrounded by a handful of bullet casings and a few dark red splotches of blood across the white tiles. Bill had a fresh cut on his brow and his wire-framed glasses lay twisted and askew beside him. But there was no sign of a gun, let alone the shooter.
Kevin grabbed the phone and frantically dialed 911.
It was 9:11
P.M.
on December 15, 1994.
CHAPTER 1
Bill McLaughlin, who had enlisted in the U.S. Marines at seventeen, right out of high school, was a health-conscious fitness fanatic who insisted on being the master of his domain.
He loved his three children unconditionally and was very affectionate with them, completely indifferent to what people might think when he exhibited his love for his son. He and Kevin made a habit of kissing, hugging, and exchanging “I love you, son,” and “I love you, Dad” endearments in public. They also acted wacky together, karate-chopping at each other like Bruce Lee as they stood in line at the movies, embarrassing the rest of the family.
Bill believed in a tough-love approach to drugs, but when he ordered Kevin to go to AA meetings, he wasn't just some hard-ass overreacting to his son's recreational use of marijuana, Pacifico beer, and the occasional vodka binge. Kevin's pot-smoking habit had hurt and upset Bill even before a drunk driver going sixty-five miles per hour had struck the twenty-one-year-old as he was skateboarding home from a bar.
After Kevin was seriously injured and almost died in October 1991, Bill was understandably even more concerned. His son had spent eighteen months progressing through several rehab facilities, finally coming home to live in the quiet, gated community of Balboa Coves.
Now twenty-four, Kevin was finally able to walk on his own again, so the last thing Bill wanted was for Kevin to derail his recovery by smoking and drinking out of frustration with his disabled body and lagging communication skills. Bill was also worried that Kevin's addictive behaviors could result in a fall, triggering new injuries.
As a result, Bill forced his son to sign a contract to stop using drugs and alcohol. He also kept the refrigerator stocked with drug-testing kits. If Kevin broke the contract, Bill said, he would put him in a board-and-care home. Kevin didn't like the restrictions, which caused tensions between them, but the pact seemed to be working.
Kevin's two-pronged recovery was challenging for him and his family, who were still very close, even though time and circumstances had sent them in different directions around the globe. Bill's oldest childâhis sunny and warm daughter Kimâwas living in Tokyo, where she taught second grade at an international school. Jenny, the more reserved daughter, a high-school science and physics teacher, lived in nearby Laguna Niguel. And his ex-wife, Sue, had moved to their house in Hanalei, Hawaii, not long after she filed for divorce in 1990, leaving twenty-four years of marriage behind her.
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Now that Bill was “retired” and had plenty of money to pay for his son's therapy, he insisted on taking care of Kevin full-time. But their home in Balboa Coves was anything but a bachelor pad.
By December 1994, Bill's fiancée, a fellow divorcee named Nanette, had been living in their two-story home for three and a half years. Most friends and family believed the couple had met “through friends,” but Bill and Nanette knew the truth.
On a shelf in the master bedroom's closet, Bill kept a small chest containing several dozen greeting cards. All but one of the envelopes had no address, indicating that they'd been hand-delivered. The one at the bottom of the stack, which was kept in Bill's usual meticulous chronological order, was a handwritten card that Nanette had mailed to him at the very beginning to introduce herself, apparently after he'd answered her personal ad. She was blondish, thin, had advanced degrees, wrote business plans for a living, and worked out to stay fit, just like he did.
They were a good match. Or so he thought.
Even though his family couldn't or, perhaps, didn't want to believe that Bill would have responded to such an ad, they later learned that Nanette had placed one titled, “For Wealthy Men Only” in the February 1991 issue of
Singles Connection,
right around the time that she and Bill had started dating:
SWF, 25, 5'5” 100#, classy, well-educated, adventurous, fun and knows how to take care of her man. Looking for an older man, 30+, who knows how to treat a woman. You take care of me and I'll take care of you.
If that was, in fact, the deal they'd struck, Bill certainly had held up his end of the bargain. He and Nanette hadn't been dating long before she moved in that August. They made a second home in Kim and Jenny's old rooms for Nanette's kidsâfour-year-old Lishele and six-year-old Kristoferâwho often stayed over. Nanette agreed to quit her sales position, and with their new arrangement came the promise that her only job would be to take care of Bill, pay the household bills, and help him run his affairs.
Nanette, with her ambitions and entrepreneurial spirit, reminded Bill of himself. As he took the young woman under his wing, she tried to bring them even closer, asking him to reverse his vasectomy so they could have a child together and get married. Recently divorced, however, Bill wasn't eager to tie the knot again anytime soon. Instead, he gave her a ring with a sizable diamond, hoping to satisfy her for the time being, and breast implants, to boot. He told a friend that this was a “companion's” ring, which might explain why he and Nanette never had an engagement party, set a wedding date, or made any plans for a ceremony.
“He told me she was pressuring him to get married and have a child and he got her the ring to keep her [happy],” Jenny recalled.
Nanette, on the other hand, proudly told Bill's friends and family about the engagement and showed off her big rock. But what Bill didn't know was that she never wore it to the exclusive Sporting Club gym in Irvine, where she kept her slender figure in shape, met and secretly dated a series of athletic men, who were quite a bit younger than her wealthy fiancé.
Although she later contended that she and Bill had an “unspoken agreement,” which allowed her to see other men as long as she didn't embarrass him, his family and friends never heard anything about it, nor did they believe it had ever existed. They all thought Bill and Nanette were happily seeing each other exclusively.
Bill's daughters never volunteered their feelings of distrust and dislike for his girlfriend, but they were honest when he questioned them directly.
“Do you think she's with me for my money?” he asked.
“Yes,” they replied.
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Bill had been exploring various business ventures since he'd sold the Plasmacell-C, a groundbreaking medical filtration device that separated plasma from blood, in a deal that paid him a small fortune in royalties every year. Counting his property assets, including two homes in Newport Beach, two in Las Vegas, and a condo development project with an airstrip in the desert, he was worth about $55 million. In addition to investing in real estate, he was also researching new uses for his blood filter and searching for a cancer cure, no less.
“He just loved the challenge and learning new things,” Kim recalled.
Over time, Bill shared more and more with Nanette. He discussed his projects with her, and he bought her a new red Infiniti convertible. But after she rolled that car and was arrested for a DIU in 1992, she insisted on driving Bill's green Cadillac.
Bill set up a joint checking account, in which he generally kept a balance of $10,000 to $20,000, and authorized her to sign checks on it to pay the bills. He also provided for her in his living will, made her a trustee of his estate if he should die, and listed her as the beneficiary of a $1 million life insurance policy. The will gave her a year rent-free in the beachfront house he owned on Seashore Drive, as well as $150,000 in cash and the Infiniti.
Bill seemed content in his life with Nanette, whom he took on ski trips and exotic vacationsâalways bringing her children with them. He was just as affectionate with them as if they were his own, and his fondness for them was mutual. Nanette was constantly taking snapshots of them together as he let them steer his speedboat, cuddled with them on the couch as they watched TV, and hugged them in front of his plane, where he let them take the controls during flights to Las Vegas, to ski in Utah, or to other vacation spots.
Usually, though, Bill went alone to Vegas to conduct business, which lately had involved a protracted legal battle against a former business partner, and also buying firearms at gun shows.
Since Congress had passed the “Brady Bill” in 1993, making it more difficult to buy guns, Bill had stockpiled about one hundred of them, mostly as an investment, but also for protection. He kept a Jennings .380 under the seat of his white Mercedes, the car he drove between Balboa Coves and the airport, and a nine-millimeter Taurus in a lockbox next to his bed.
On the days Bill was out of town, Nanette usually went shopping and did as she pleased back in Newport, staying the night with the men she met at the gym when she wasn't with her kids. She also helped take care of Bill's son, Kevin, who had come a long way since he came out of the coma.
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Kevin McLaughlin was extremely proud that his AA buddies had appointed him secretary of their weekly meeting, because it came with the important duty of taking notes. Because he still suffered from tremors, it took him half an hour to write a one-page letter. He'd also had to learn how to talk all over again, and speaking was a challenge he had yet to master again. His slurred speech could make him sound drunk, especially when he was tired, upset, or under stress. And although his family and his girlfriend could understand him most of the time, it was harder for strangers, especially under these circumstances.
Imagine his frustration that December night as his father lay bleeding on the kitchen floor and Kevin struggled to convey the most important message he'd ever tried to deliver.
“My father's been shot,” he said to the 911 dispatcher at the Newport Beach Police Department.
“What do you need the police for, sir?” she asked, unable to make out his garbled moans. “I can't understand what you're saying.”
“My dad was shot.”
“Say it to me again, sir.”
As he tried to convey the nature of his emergency, he felt helpless as he saw his father's life slipping away, right in front of him. However, Kevin's words were jumbled together, and because he was so upset, he was also yelling, which made it even more difficult for the dispatcher to make out his urgent, guttural tones.
“Are you hurt?” she asked. “Is there anybody out there that can talk to me? . . . Is it your father or your dog? . . . What's the matter with your mother?”
Although the dispatcher was able to pick out the word “gun” and realized that she needed to send paramedics, she still couldn't discern what else Kevin was trying to say.
“Do you think he shot himself?” she asked.
A second dispatcher came on the line to see if she could calm the distraught young man so they could understand him better.
“Isâis your dad breathing?”
“No,” Kevin said.
But try as she might, she, too, misunderstood many of his responses. “Did he just fall over? . . . Do you know what happened to him? . . . Heart attack? . . . Did you say âa gun'?”
“Yeah.”
“Where is the gun?”
“I don't know.”
“But you think he shot himself?”
These details would all be sorted out later, but there was still the matter of the locked main gate leading into the community, which the police and paramedics couldn't open without some assistance.
“Do you know how to open the gate?” the dispatcher asked.
Although it took nearly five minutes for the dispatchers to decipher Kevin's cry for help, they were able to alert some bike patrol officers in the area, who were the first to gain entrance through the main gate and pedal over to the McLaughlin house. But by the time paramedics arrived and rolled Bill onto his back, they realized there was no point in trying to revive him. He was gone.
It was maddening for Kevin not to be able to communicate better with the dispatchers. He told his sisters that he was angry he hadn't been able to do more to help his father. However, the minutes that ticked by while he was on the phone didn't make much difference to his father's chances of survival.
The autopsy showed that any one of the six 9mm Federal Hydra-Shok bullets fired into Bill's chest could have been the fatal shot, killing him almost immediately. The hollow-point bullets, designed to tear through tissue as the tips mushroomed upon impact, had torn right through Bill's heart and upper torso. Based on the “stippling” marks on his skinâa circular pattern of dots created by firing a gun at close rangeâthe coroner said that at least two of the bullets, presumably the last two, were fired from about two feet away. All the shots were fired from front to back, downward and to the left. Because Bill stood at nearly five feet ten inches, this indicated that the killer was probably taller than he was.
The 911 tape was tragic to hear in 1994, and even though seventeen years had passed by the time Kevin's mostly incomprehensible statements reverberated throughout a Santa Ana courtroom, they still ripped open the emotional scars in Bill's family and close friends.
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After climbing over the wall into the McLaughlins' front yard, the bike patrol officers saw that the front door was wide open, and a silver key was stuck in the lock. A gold key also lay on the doormat, apparently dropped by the shooter in his haste to flee. Both keys looked newâthey were shiny and had the small temporary rings that some hardware stores attach to freshly ground copies.
The police soon learned that the gold key opened a pedestrian-access gate across the cul-de-sac, which led to an asphalt path for biking, jogging, and walking. The gate was kept locked, but the spring wasn't so tight that it couldn't be accidentally left ajar or finessed to keep it propped open. On either side of the gate was a chain-link fence, topped with barbed wire, that surrounded the community. Today, that fence has been replaced by a higher and more substantial plaster wall, which is covered with a thick, prickly layer of bougainvillea.